For quite a while now, there has been a lot of talk about us going into a much more unsettled weather pattern with the likelihood that February would end up being much wetter than what we have used to during this winter so far. However, the question which I have to ask is where on Earth is this "unsettled" weather that everyone has been talking about, since I'm still seeing absolutely no signs of that here in Edinburgh where I live. We did have one wet day last Saturday, but that came at the end of a very long dry spell and one wet day on its own is never going to be enough to break what could still be a potential drought situation as we head futher into the year towards the summer.
We were supposed to get some rain on Tuesday, but we got absolutely nothing from that system other than a few spots of rain during the previous night and a few lightish showers during that afternoon which didn't really come to anything. We were then supposed to get some rain this morning, but we have nothing from that so far and the latest radar map isn't even showing any signs of that here as I write. On top of that, subsequent low pressure systems after that now look set to take a more southerly track.
From what I can see, the best chance of us getting any rain might come on Saturday as the first of those low pressure systems swings northwards towards us but even with that, the forecast maps which I have seen so far are still not showing very high rainfall totals for here, even on that day. Beyond that, it looks as though high pressure might build across Scandinavia. There is a question mark about whether this might lead us into a colder pattern, and the fact that we have just had a SSW event might possibility make that a slightly better possibility than what we have seen so far this winter. However, there has been too many times where the models have shown the possibility of a Scandy High only for that to never happen, that I can't really trust that either even with that SSW event.
So far whenever a Scandy High has been indicated to form, it has always been too far south to deliver any cold weather here which has meant that most of that cold weather has gone into southern Europe and although some of that did extend into the south of England during January, we have always still been left in that milder Atlantic air mass, and it wouldn't surprise me if that is what ended up happening again, given the way that this winter has gone so far. Whether we actually get that Scandy High or not though, the fact that high pressure is likely to be nearby and influencing our weather will reduce that risk of rain which is being shown just now.
That means that sepite all of the take about a pattern change and something more interesting coming up, it is now looking as though month will probably end up once again with that same old story, of the usual mild dross and very little actually happening and to me, it is a bit like having to sit through a football match which was built up to be a really big and exciting game, only for that to end up as a really dull and boring no-scoring draw and quite frankly, it is far more exciting watching paint dry than watching our weather just now. We used to say that one of the interesting aspects of our weather comes from the fact that it is constantly changing.
However, recent experience appears to be showing that in that part of the world at least, this hardly ever seems to be the case any more.
The north of Edinburgh, usually always missing out on snow events which occur not just within the rest of Scotland or the UK, but also within the rest of Edinburgh.